Breaking Hailey: Chapter 44
Breaking Hailey (Shadows of Obsession Book 1)
Clutching my phone, I stare at Dad in the sparse contact list, gearing up the courage to send the call.
I want to go home.
Not forever, just a few days, one weekend. Two nights. I know Dad will immediately say no, so Iâve been crafting a fool-proof plan, hoping heâll agree.
I need to see my room, our house, him. I want to sift through my personal belongings and find out if anything triggers a relevant memory.
The flashback with the gun haunts my sleep, but no matter how hard I try, I canât remember any more details. The more I push it, the further from an answer I drift.
My mindâs not playing ball.
Iâve been getting different memories of Alex back lately, shifting from the painful and gruesome ones that set off panic attacks, to those that leave me melancholic. Those that donât mention the case heâs been working on, the girl he fell in love with, or the risks he was taking. And I know the risks, the case, and the girl are whatâs important.
Not the beginning of our relationship when he sent me to the hairdresser and bought me pretty dresses and jewelry. None of that matters.
If I go home, see my room, maybe find Alexâs t-shirt in my wardrobe, I might get back on track.
I need a catalyst like the gun was. Something powerful.
Maybe Alex will find out I came to visit and heâll stop by? God knows I donât want him anywhere near me, but I bet heâd trigger a lot of memories.
Still, itâs wishful thinking. Dad would never let that happen. Ifâand thatâs a huge ifâhe lets me come home, heâll probably board the windows and chain me to the radiator, so I can only move inside the house.
I made a mistake telling Dad and Matthews about Alex and me. Now theyâll keep him away at all costs.
Over the past few days Iâve begun to understand the progression of our relationship. My diaryâs half full, the flashbacks hitting daily, sometimes a few times a day.
I had a crush on Alex. He was there for me when no one else was. When my dad worked fourteen-hour shifts, leaving me at home alone. Still grieving my mother, I kept to myself at college. Alex was the only bit of meaningful human interaction I had for months. He listened. He asked questions about Mom. He helped me navigate the pain and come out on the other side almost unscathed.
Almost whole. Enough that Iâd trust him while he disassembled me, then put me back together, adding the pieces of the girl he really wanted.
We kept our relationship a secret because of the age difference and his job. And it was a relationship. I remember the hours we spent on the couch, watching TV, cuddling and kissing while Dad wasnât home, and the stolen, longing looks whenever he was.
I remember how gentle Alex was with me at first, but I donât remember how we went from whispered I canât wait until weâre alone, sweetheart in passing while Dad sat watching TV after dinner, to youâre a dirty fucking slut.
The clock on my nightstand clicks another minute over. I donât have much time before I have to haul myself across campus for my morning acting class. Itâs a miracle Iâm alone; Nash rarely lets me out of his sight.
He worries what will happen when a bad memory pulls me under. At least he hasnât witnessed my sleep paralysis yet.
Itâs eased off lately, right about the same time I started getting less traumatic memories back.
With a deep breath for courage, I slide my thumb across the screen and press the phone to my ear. It rings once, twiceâ
âMorning, sunshine,â Dad chirps. âEverything okay?â
I usually call in the evening while Iâm lying with my head in Nashâs lap, the conversations short and clipped.
âIâd like to come home for Halloween weekend,â I say before I lose my nerve. âJust two nights.â
He sighs deeply, a sigh I know so well. The sigh of a father explaining the same thing for the hundredth time.
âYou know thatâs not possible.â
âMy headâs fine now. You know that. Itâs been weeks, thereâs no swelling left, Iâm okay. I can handle coming home, Dad. I remember the house. My room, the kitchen, the living room⦠I remember. Seeing it wonât hurt me.â
âThatâs not for you to decide, Hailey, youââ
âThen have Dr. Phillips check me over. Thereâs a hospital in town. I can get a brain scan done today.â
âThis isnât just about your head. Youâre safe at college. Your accidentâ¦â Another sigh. Deep, defeated. So pained it tears at my heart. âIt wasnât an accident.â
No shit. I figured that out a while back, yet hearing him say it still knocks the breath out of my chest.
âI wasnât driving,â I add what little information I have, my stomach roiling. âYou lied.â
âI know, sunshine. Iâm sorry. You have no idea how much it cost me to lie to you after I promised I never would, but I had to. Itâs for your own good. Iâm trying to protect you.â
Iâve heard it all before. Alex said the exact same thing the night I threatened to tell Dad about his involvement with the mystery girl. Sheâs the key. If only I knew her nameâ¦
âYou canât come home. Not until I know youâll be safe here. Iâm working on it, I swear, but I canât tell you everything.â
âYou mean anything,â I snap, flinging my bag over my shoulder. âWhatever happened involves me, Dad. Maybe if I remembered, I could help? Have you thought about that?!â
âThatâs all I think about,â he admits quietly. âBut I wonât risk your life by bringing you home unless youâre not safe where you are.â
Nashâs face flickers on the backs of my eyelids. The anger in his eyes when he saw me hurt, how obscenely protective he is, how unhealthily possessive and territorial.
I am safe.
He wonât let a hair fall off my head.
âIâm safe,â I murmur.
âThen youâre staying right where you are until I know I can bring you home. Iâm doing everything to make that happen as soon as possible, sunshine. Just⦠give me a bit more time.â
All the battle seeps out of me when Dadâs voice cracks. This is as hard on him as it is on me. Probably ten times worse because he knows what heâs up against. Heâs out there, fighting, while Iâm cocooned in this safety net he and Nash have woven around me.
âOkay,â I mutter, closing my eyes. âOkay, Iâll stay here.â
âââ
âWhatâs wrong?â Nash asks when I barge into his room later in the afternoon, after another line-reading session with Chloe. âWere you crying?â
I shake my head, biting my lip. âNot yet, but Iâm this close.â
He sets his laptop aside, making room on his lap, and takes my wrist, tugging until I straddle him, my head in the crook of his neck, first tears stinging my eyes.
âI donât know why Iâm this upset. I knew he was lying the whole time,â I mutter, sniffling pathetically. I kept it together all day, but the moment the last bell rang, I folded under the weight of Dadâs confession. âItâs just⦠I could hear the fear in his voice and it dawned on me how bad things must be if heâs this scared. Heâs never scared.â
âYou called your dad,â Nash guesses, brushing my hair over my ear. âWhat did he say?â
âThat the accident when I lost my memories wasnât an accident. That Iâm not safe, thatââ
âYouâre safe,â he cuts in, pushing me away enough to cup my face. âI keep you safe, pretty girl.â
âYou donât even know whatâs happening. I donât know whatâs happening. I keep trying to remember but itâs not coming back. Nothing important has come back since I saw your gun.â
I sit up straight, eyes wide, an idea striking me like a stone dropped in a well. Swatting my tears away when Nashâs hands fall to my thighs, I scrunch my nose, wondering if heâll agree.
âYou want to see my gun again?â he asks, inching his fingers higher under my skirt.
âCould I? Itâs the only tangible thing thatâs triggered any memories. Maybe if I see it again, Iâll remember more. Something important, not meaningless cuddles and kisses.â
A muscle feathers his jaw, eyes darkening faster than I can blink. âI fucking hate that he touched you first.â
âHe didnât, you did.â
He lifts his hand, brushing his thumb over my lips. âHe kissed you, Hailey. He held you, touched you, spoke to you.â
âHe wasnât first,â I blurt out like thatâll help. âI had my first kiss when I was sixteen. It was bad.â
Nash closes his eyes briefly as if reining his flaring temper, and I take the opportunity to distract him with a kiss.
He moves his hands to my hips, yanking me closer, and he takes. He pours his frustration into the kiss, his hot tongue tangling with mine, every lick and nibble a statement. A claim. Iâm his and he knows that, but it doesnât tame his territoriality.
If anything, it grows more vicious every day.
As much as I want to keep going and let our clothes fall away, I close his lips, skimming my nose up his cheek until I press a soft kiss on his forehead.
âThe gun?â I whisper, tangling my fingers in the short hair at the back of his head. âPlease.â
âOnly if you promise you wonât ask questions about it.â
I nod, sliding into the seat beside him.
âAnd you do as youâre told,â he adds. âClose your eyes.â
A small eleven crawls onto my forehead. âWhy?â
He cocks an eyebrow. âYou need me to spell it out? What happened last time you saw it?â
âOkay, closing my eyes.â
He waits until I do, then moves about the room. He makes sounds all over the place, a rustle here, a faint tap there, a muffled thump near the door. A maze of noises designed to disorient my sense of direction, so I canât pinpoint where he keeps the gun. I didnât think he had one here.
Is it the one from the glovebox or does he have two?
And why would he have either in the first place?
I push the question away when Nash stops opening drawers and banging the closet door.
âKeep them closed,â he reminds me, his voice softer, closer. The cushion dips beside me. âCome on.â He grips my forearm, helping me until Iâm between his legs, my back against his hard chest.
He cinches his arm around my middle, a fistful of my dress grasped in his hand. A soft kiss lands on the nape of my neck, sparking a pleasant shudder, and I lean back against him.
I didnât realize how tightly Iâd wound myself up until that kiss dissolved the tension.
âOpen your eyes,â he says, his breath warm against my skin, his arm molding me harder into him.
My eyelids flutter open. He holds his free hand out, the gun resting on his palm. The cold metal gleams in the daylight. Itâs smaller than I remember. Either my imaginationâs exaggerated the size, or this isnât the same gun.
My breath catches in my throat at the absent serial number. My dadâs a cop, Iâve seen guns before. Legal guns. This doesnât fall into that category.
The chill that was lurking in my spine spreads quickly. Questions multiply, dancing along my vocal cords, but I swallow them all. I canât ask. And to be perfectly honest⦠Iâm not sure I want answers. Not yet.
One thing at a time.
My hand inches toward the shining steel, led by curiosity and hope that touching it might trigger a memory, but before my fingers get anywhere near it, Nash draws away, gathering more of my dress into his hand.
âCareful, Hailey. Itâs loaded.â
I hold my breath when he moves his hand back, letting me drag my index finger along the barrel.
Nothing happens.
Undeterred, I grasp the handle. The gunâs heavier than I anticipated but feels oddly good. Cold and deadly, but good.
Still, no flashbacks.
A pervasive sense of failure catches in my throat, swelling into a lump of frustration. I thought itâd work. I thought touching the gun would be enough to unlock those firmly shut doors in my mind.
âNothing,â I whisper. âI guess it was too easy.â
âYou canât force it.â Nash takes the gun, leaving it on the armrest, out of reach, his arm around my waist relaxing.
I close my eyes and the first thing I see is that memory. A chubby finger pulling the trigger, the bullet leaving the barrel as if in slow motion, a small explosion puffing around it.
An idea strikes me. Desperate but clear.
âCould you⦠could you shoot something?â I ask, the words tumbling out before I think them through.
Nash stills behind me, his chest expanding as he takes a deep, measured breath, his shoulders squaring.
I turn, climbing onto his lap, straddling him again. âPlease.â
âNo.â He spits the word out the same as when I first ran into him in the cafeteria. âNo fucking way.â
âPretty please? The flashback I had⦠it was concentrated around the bullet. Maybe if I see that again, if I see it now, not in my head, itâll trigger more.â
Epic poems could be composed about the conflict burning through Nashâs face. About his clenched jaw and the turbulence in his dark, unforgiving eyes.
Heâs always so confident, so unshakably in control, but now, a flicker of doubt shines through. A battle rages in his mind. I see it clearly. A battle between his overprotective instinct and the part that wants to help me reconstruct my past.
Thatâs a perfect opportunity to strike again.
I lay my hand against his chest, over his heart, over the piece of me he has tattooed there. âIâm tired of guessing. None of the small pieces fit together. This is the only idea I have. I canât go home, I canât see Alex, I donât have anything else to release the memory Iâm after, but thisâ¦â I glance at his gun. âThis might be it. I need this.â I lean over, my thumbs swiping the soft skin under his eyes. âPlease. One shot.â
For a long moment, he studies me, searches my face, that battle raging inside him escalating to all-out war. Then, slowly, he exhales, breathing out a silent surrender.
âFuck,â he grits out. âYouâre a pain in my ass, you know that? One shot, pretty girl. And you follow my every order.â
âI promise.â